We present a long-duration (∼10 years) statistical analysis of the
temperatures, plasma betas, and temperature ratios for the electron, proton,
and alpha-particle populations observed by the \emph{Wind} spacecraft near 1
AU. The mean(median) scalar temperatures are Te,tot=
12.2(11.9) eV, Tp,tot= 12.7(8.6) eV, and
Tα,tot= 23.9(10.8) eV. The mean(median) total
plasma betas are βe,tot= 2.31(1.09),
βp,tot= 1.79(1.05), and βα,tot= 0.17(0.05). The mean(median) temperature ratios are
(Te/Tp)tot=
1.64(1.27),
(Te/Tα)tot= 1.24(0.82), and
(Tα/Tp)tot= 2.50(1.94). We also examined these parameters during time intervals that
exclude interplanetary (IP) shocks, times within the magnetic obstacles (MOs)
of interplanetary coronal mass ejections (ICMEs), and times that exclude MOs.
The only times that show significant alterations to any of the parameters
examined are those during MOs. In fact, the only parameter that does not show a
significant change during MOs is the electron temperature. Although each
parameter shows a broad range of values, the vast majority are near the median.
We also compute particle-particle collision rates and compare to effective
wave-particle collision rates. We find that, for reasonable assumptions of wave
amplitude and occurrence rates, the effect of wave-particle interactions on the
plasma is equal to or greater than the effect of Coulomb collisions. Thus,
wave-particle interactions should not be neglected when modeling the solar
wind.Comment: 23 pages, 3 figures, 6 tables, submitted to Astrophys. J. Suppl. on
Jan. 30, 201